A Calculated Risk, by Katherine Neville
Filed under: book review, Katherine Neville, Thriller
I read this book largely because I have recently read The Eight by the same author, and liked it a lot. However, this is a much shorter book than Neville’s first book, The Eight, somewhat more humorous, and not nearly as good. To some extent it may be read as a satire on the world of banking.
The heroine of A Calculated Risk is Verity Banks. Verity is a computer expert. Currently she is a vice-president of
the Bank of the World in San Francisco, in charge of Electronic Funds Transfer.
When her boss turns down her proposal for a tighter security system at the bank, Verity decides to break through security, hide some money where no one will find it, and then put it back, to show everyone how easily it can be done. However, when she seeks advice from her former mentor, Dr. Zoltan Tor, he surprises her by giving her a challenge that adds a new twist to her own plan: Which of them can steal $1 billion, and invest it to earn $30 million in only three months? (The money will be returned, and no one will be injured.)
If Verity wins, Tor will get her a job at the Federal Reserve that she wants. If Tor wins, Verity will come to New York to work for him. However, while working on their scams, Tor and Verity stumble on a plan by members of the Vagabond Club, a club of CEOs of major corporations, to take over the Bank of the World in a financial coup, possibly sending the U.S. economy into a tailspin.
I enjoyed A Calculated Risk, but in my opinion it is not in the same league as The Eight. Both Zoltan Tor and Verity Banks are very likable characters, and the relationship between them interesting. As well, the plot is interesting, but the drive is somewhat lacking. The pace is a tad too slow and the side-stories not quite interesting enough.
The Eight, by Katherine Neville
Filed under: book review, Fiction, historical fiction, Katherine Neville
Katherine Neville’s The Eight is a book that transcends genres. It is a work of fiction as well as a crime novel and a thriller. Or it is a swashbuckling adventure, 
a historical mystery, a puzzle, with elements of fantasy thrown in. I still don’t really know. But I think it is a little of all.
The Eight has been compared to the writings of Umberto Eco and Dan Brown
, and there is some substance to such comparisons. Like in works of those writers, Cathrine Neville’s plot is big and rich with symbolism and interpretation. The story revolves around an ancient chess set named the Montglane Service. Crafted by a Sufi master in Babylon, it was later given to the medieval French emperor Charlemagne.
The set supposedly has vast occult powers. Its parts have been spread around the globe and there are hidden forces working to find and unite the pieces. Two sets of players, actually. And the struggle for control over the pieces is referred to by them as “the Game”.
The Game spans centuries and generations. It is played out much like a tense game of chess with real players. The key player is Catherine Velis, a financial computer expert. She is sent to Algiers, seemingly as a “punishment” by her firm. However, she soon realized there is much more to it than that. In reality, she is a pawn in a big chess game where the stakes are incredibly high. And, as well, a parallel path is taken by Mireille de Remi, a young novice discovers that her abbey is the hiding place of a chess set, and who struggles to survive in the heart of the French Revolution. The stories of these two women, two hundred years apart, slowly converge in the book. A number of important historical figures – Rousseau, Voltaire, Talleyrand, Napoleon, and others play smaller roles in the book as well.
The book tells a large tale and has a big, convoluted plot. I found it a nice interesting read. Good fun, really, and to some extent a cult book. Still well worth a visit, in my opinion.
Or, if you prefer amazon UK, use this link:Katherine Nevilles books. And here is a link to the German translation of The Eight: Das Montglane-Spiel
at Amazon DE.

